Skip to main content
Program Delivery Update

Updated IMP C41 exempts spouses of foreign‑trained Quebec health‑care professionals from 16‑month open work permit restriction

By Soheil Hosseini • May 29, 2026
Updated IMP C41 exempts spouses of foreign‑trained Quebec health‑care professionals from 16‑month open work permit restriction

IRCC updated IMP C41 (R205(c)(ii)), effective 2026-05-29, exempting spouses of foreign‑trained Quebec health‑care professionals from the 16‑month open work permit restriction. The Quebec‑specific change is intended to support family accompaniment and retention of health‑sector talent.

S

Soheil Hosseini

May 29, 2026

🔗 Official Source
🏛️

Jurisdiction

Quebec

📊

Week

Week 22

🎯

Impact

Moderate

Programs Affected

Work Permit EE-Health
5 min read

Updated IMP C41 exempts spouses of foreign‑trained Quebec health‑care professionals from 16‑month open work permit restriction

Summary: IRCC has updated IMP C41 to add an exemption in Quebec, allowing the spouses of foreign‑trained health‑care professionals to avoid the 16‑month open work permit restriction, effective 2026-05-29. Date of Update: 2026-05-29 IRCC has revised its instructions under the International Mobility Program, administrative code C41 (R205(c)(ii)), to introduce an exemption from the 16‑month open work permit rule for the spouses of foreign‑trained health‑care professionals in Quebec. The update references measures originally implemented on January 21, 2026, and adds new guidance specific to this spousal category. The change means that eligible spouses in Quebec are now exempt from the 16‑month cap that had limited the duration or availability of certain open work permits. This adjustment is positioned within the policy framework aimed at supporting health‑sector capacity and integration of foreign‑trained professionals. Program affected: Work Permit; EE‑Health Source: IRCC Analysis and potential impacts:
- Positive: The exemption is likely to improve talent attraction and retention in Quebec’s health system by facilitating family accompaniment and labor market participation of spouses. It may reduce processing friction for families and support quicker settlement outcomes.
- Neutral to mixed: Because the exemption is Quebec‑specific, it could create inter‑provincial disparities for similarly situated families elsewhere in Canada.
- Administrative: Stakeholders should anticipate updated IRCC processing instructions and ensure applications clearly establish eligibility under C41 and Quebec health‑care professional status to benefit from the exemption.

Closing: This targeted exemption under IMP C41 signals IRCC’s continued use of program‑level flexibilities to address health‑workforce needs in Quebec while supporting family unity. Applicants and employers should review the latest IRCC instructions before filing to leverage the new eligibility pathway.

Tags: IRCC, International Mobility Program, IMP C41, R205(c)(ii), Open Work Permit, Spousal Work Permit, Quebec, Health‑care Professionals, Work Permit Update, Canada Immigration Policy, EE‑Health, 2026 Updates

Categories

Program Delivery Update

Share This Post

📧

Stay Updated with Immigration News

Get the latest updates on Express Entry draws, OINP invitations, policy changes, and more delivered to your inbox.

We respect your privacy. Unsubscribe at any time.

Related Articles

BC PNP Guide Tightens Eligibility: ELSS Removed, New Ineligible NOCs and Higher Income Thresholds
Program Delivery Update High

BC PNP Eligibility Changes

BC PNP’s 2026-05-28 guide removes the ELSS stream, raises minimum income thresholds (2024 LICO), and adds a new list of ineligible NOCs for applications filed after 2026-06-13. Limited-term eligibility expands for public school teachers and university faculty, certain unpaid doctoral work may count, and immigration-service employers are broadly ineligible—reassess NOC, wages, employer type, and contract length.

May 29, 2026 Read more →
Canada Adds Indonesia and Malaysia to eTA‑X, Allowing Some Air Travellers with Past TRV or Valid U.S. Visa to Apply
Program Delivery Update Moderate

eTA-X: Indonesia & Malaysia

Canada added Indonesia and Malaysia to its eTA‑X program, letting certain visa‑required air travellers who held a Canadian TRV in the past 10 years or who hold a valid U.S. nonimmigrant visa apply for an eTA. Both countries remain otherwise visa‑required and the change applies to air travel only.

May 26, 2026 Read more →
Global Affairs scales back foreign intake; IRCC to perform minimal checks and reject incomplete citizenship certificate applications
Program Delivery Update Low

GAC scales back intake

Effective 2026-03-01, Global Affairs Canada will scale back intake for proof-of-citizenship applications filed from outside Canada and the United States and will stop completeness checks; IRCC’s DIOD will perform minimal completeness checks. IRCC will reject applications missing core elements—CIT 0001 form, compliant photographs, required signatures, or proof of the $75 fee—while other supporting documents may be requested later.

May 15, 2026 Read more →
IRCC updates humanitarian and compassionate guidance on assessing evidence, research and decision-writing
Program Delivery Update Low

IRCC H&C Guidance Update

On 2026-05-12 IRCC issued minor updates to H&C program delivery instructions clarifying evidence assessment, independent research/disclosure and decision‑writing standards with an emphasis on procedural fairness and the best interests of the child. Officers must weigh evidence on a balance of probabilities, disclose and upload relied‑upon external research to GCMS, and use neutral, well‑documented reasoning.

May 12, 2026 Read more →